write an essay about my vision for a new Africa
Answers
Explanation:
India is a land of amazing extremes. Here we find beautiful mountain ranges lowering above the populated valleys and forested plains in which the tiger, the trundling rhinoceros and beautiful birds live. Enchantment is everywhere be at on the shoulder of high mountain or on the terraced farm-lands meticulously carved like stairways out of the hill ridges, cascading rivulets and rushing rivers or in the forests full of wildlife, flowers and birds songs or be it on the hot sand dunes of deserts or in our lakes, rivers and seas.
India provides something for everything be it young or old, poet or painter, scholar or an artist, politician or a warrior, all take inspiration for this land. This land of combination of art which inspires and beauty which attracts millions is an eternal bliss for them.
India is an oasis of world’s different people living together. As we have stepped into the new millennium, Indian diversity in terms of its religion, language, culture etc. will always set a model for this world. We have a rich cultural heritage inherited from our ancestors. The millennium which has recently unfolded its petals has given this country a lot i.e., from a colonized to an independent country with a strong democracy and from an underdeveloped to a developing country and so on. We are proud to be the heirs of rich legacy given to us by the dedication, sacrifice and hardwork of our freedom fighters. Thus, it is the indefatigable efforts of those heroes whose heroic sacrifices have contributed to the uniqueness of India on this globe.
Explanation:
For most people in Britain, ‘Africa’ is represented by a series of visual metaphors that might range from images of wildlife and nature reserves to the spears and hair styles of the Masai. The current BBC logo in which young Masai men leap in the air screams ‘Africa!’ in much the same way as a line-up of Bollywood dancers is a statement about the identity of Indians. We interpret what we see in a way that is conditioned and determined by a specific visual history, a fact that is all too often forgotten or ignored when we look at real people in our current presentations and explorations of ‘diversity’.
The importance of the Tate’s new